What does an accelerated particle see of the clock of the accelerator?
The accelerated particle has the slowest clock guaranteed. So what
does it see of the accelerator?
A train with a clock on the front passes a station at near light
speed. What does the station see of the train's clock slower or
faster?
What does the train with the slower clock see of the stations clock
when passing?
Which one is going faster?
The one that accelerated through space and experienced the equivalent
of gravity's weight will have the slower clock and see the stations
going faster while passing.
Mitch Raemsch; Twice Nobel Laureate 2008
BURT - 30 Jun 2008 04:23 GMT
> What does an accelerated particle see of the clock of the accelerator?
> The accelerated particle has the slowest clock guaranteed. So what
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> Mitch Raemsch; Twice Nobel Laureate 2008
All motion is not relative. Relative motion is just the appearence of
motion. Begin to move and you experience weight while things around
you appear to start moving. Relativity of motion is wrong. It is all
motion through space. In order for new motion to exist it must be made
by an acceleration.
New motion is created by acceleration through space.
Mitch Raemsch
Mad Ape - 01 Jul 2008 01:29 GMT
> What does an accelerated particle see of the clock of the accelerator?
> The accelerated particle has the slowest clock guaranteed. So what
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> Mitch Raemsch; Twice Nobel Laureate 2008
Trains can't travel at light speed...relatively speaking of course!
The Mad Ape; Twice - 2 Nobel Laureate 2008
www.tatumba.com
BURT - 01 Jul 2008 20:37 GMT
> > What does an accelerated particle see of the clock of the accelerator?
> > The accelerated particle has the slowest clock guaranteed. So what
[quoted text clipped - 20 lines]
>
> - Show quoted text -
Theoretically they can approach it. You can ask what an accelerated
particle sees when looking at the accelerators clock.
Mitch Raemsch